* A majority of the data was recovered and is available through a primitive interface. If you link to http://brainvis.wustl.edu/sumsdb/ you’ll have options to view a listing of all public archives that had been in SumsDB: http://brainvis.wustl.edu/sumsdb/public_archive_index.html and to a longer list that includes many private archives as well: http://brainvis.wustl.edu/sumsdb/archive_index.html

* A majority of the data was recovered and is available through a primitive interface. If you link to http://brainvis.wustl.edu/sumsdb/ you’ll have options to view a listing of all public archives that had been in SumsDB: http://brainvis.wustl.edu/sumsdb/public_archive_index.html and to a longer list that includes many private archives as well: http://brainvis.wustl.edu/sumsdb/archive_index.html

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* If you wish to access any of these datasets, You may obtain the login password by emailing sums@brainvis.wustl.edu.

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* If you wish to access any of these datasets, You may obtain the login password by emailing sums@brainvis.wustl.edu. This requires a manual response on our side, so please be patient while awaiting login info.

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This requires a manual response on our side, so please be patient while awaiting login info.

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* The info buttons provide some information about the files contained within each archive, but be forewarned that the formatting is not pretty! It may also be slow to load.

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* The info buttons provide some information about the files contained within each archive, but be forewarned that the formatting is not pretty! It may also be slow to load. The download buttons should work once you’re logged in. Sorry that this is such a kludge, but hopefully you and others will find that it’s better than nothing. And it’s the best we’ll be able to do for legacy datasets in SumsDB.

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The download buttons should work once you’re logged in. Sorry that this is such a kludge, but hopefully you and others will find that it’s better than nothing. And it’s the best we’ll be able to do for legacy datasets in SumsDB.

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* Our lab remains strongly committed to sharing of extensively analyzed neuroimaging datasets. However, we are investing our efforts in a more forward-looking direction via the BALSA database (https://balsa.wustl.edu). In a nutshell, BALSA is to SumsDB what Connectome Workbench is to Caret visualization software. It has many nice features, and we hope that you and other investigators will switch from Caret to ‘Workbench’ and share your published results on BALSA (see https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27074495 for an article on BALSA).

* Our lab remains strongly committed to sharing of extensively analyzed neuroimaging datasets. However, we are investing our efforts in a more forward-looking direction via the BALSA database (https://balsa.wustl.edu). In a nutshell, BALSA is to SumsDB what Connectome Workbench is to Caret visualization software. It has many nice features, and we hope that you and other investigators will switch from Caret to ‘Workbench’ and share your published results on BALSA (see https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27074495 for an article on BALSA).

If you wish to access any of these datasets, You may obtain the login password by emailing sums@brainvis.wustl.edu. This requires a manual response on our side, so please be patient while awaiting login info.

The info buttons provide some information about the files contained within each archive, but be forewarned that the formatting is not pretty! It may also be slow to load. The download buttons should work once you’re logged in. Sorry that this is such a kludge, but hopefully you and others will find that it’s better than nothing. And it’s the best we’ll be able to do for legacy datasets in SumsDB.

Our lab remains strongly committed to sharing of extensively analyzed neuroimaging datasets. However, we are investing our efforts in a more forward-looking direction via the BALSA database (https://balsa.wustl.edu). In a nutshell, BALSA is to SumsDB what Connectome Workbench is to Caret visualization software. It has many nice features, and we hope that you and other investigators will switch from Caret to ‘Workbench’ and share your published results on BALSA (see https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27074495 for an article on BALSA).